Fix const qualification when executed after promotion
The const qualification was so far performed before the promotion and
the implementation assumed that it will never encounter a promoted.
With `const_precise_live_drops` feature, checking for live drops is
delayed until after drop elaboration, which in turn runs after
promotion. so the assumption is no longer true. When evaluating
`NeedsNonConstDrop` it is now possible to encounter promoteds.
Use type base qualification for the promoted. It is a sound
approximation in general, and in the specific case of promoteds and
`NeedsNonConstDrop` it is precise.
Fixes#89938.
rustc_ast: Turn `MutVisitor::token_visiting_enabled` into a constant
It's a visitor property rather than something that needs to be determined at runtime
Update E0637 description to mention `&` w/o an explicit lifetime name
Deal with https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/89824#issuecomment-941598647. Another solution would be splitting the error code into two as (I think) it's a bit unclear to users why they have the same error code.
Don't mark for loop iter expression as desugared
We typically don't mark spans of lowered things as desugared. This helps Clippy rightly discern when code is (not) from expansion. This was discovered by ``@flip1995`` at https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/7789#issuecomment-939289501.
Rollup of 14 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #86984 (Reject octal zeros in IPv4 addresses)
- #87440 (Remove unnecessary condition in Barrier::wait())
- #88644 (`AbstractConst` private fields)
- #89292 (Stabilize CString::from_vec_with_nul[_unchecked])
- #90010 (Avoid overflow in `VecDeque::with_capacity_in()`.)
- #90029 (Add test for debug logging during incremental compilation)
- #90031 (config: add the option to enable LLVM tests)
- #90048 (Add test for line-number setting)
- #90071 (Remove hir::map::blocks and use FnKind instead)
- #90074 (2229 migrations small cleanup)
- #90077 (Make `From` impls of NonZero integer const.)
- #90097 (Add test for duplicated sidebar entries for reexported macro)
- #90098 (Add test to ensure that the missing_doc_code_examples is not triggered on foreign trait implementations)
- #90099 (Fix MIRI UB in `Vec::swap_remove`)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Remove hir::map::blocks and use FnKind instead
The principal tool is `FnLikeNode`, which is not often used and can be easily implemented using `rustc_hir::intravisit::FnKind`.
Don't emit a warning for empty rmeta files.
This avoids displaying a warning when attempting to load an empty rmeta file. Warnings were enabled via #89634 which can cause a lot of noise (for example, running `./x.py check`). rustc generates empty rmeta files for things like binaries, which can happen when checking libraries as unittests.
Closes#89795
Merge the two depkind vtables
Knowledge of `DepKind`s is managed using two arrays containing flags (is_anon, eval_always, fingerprint_style), and function pointers (forcing and loading code).
This PR aims at merging the two arrays so as to reduce unneeded indirect calls and (hopefully) increase code locality.
r? `@ghost`
Erase late-bound regions before computing vtable debuginfo name.
Fixes#90019.
The `msvc_enum_fallback()` for computing enum type names needs to access the memory layout of niche enums in order to determine the type name. `compute_debuginfo_vtable_name()` did not properly erase regions before computing type names which made memory layout computation ICE when encountering un-erased regions.
r? `@wesleywiser`
resolve: Use `NameBinding` for local variables and generic parameters
`NameBinding` is a structure used for representing any name introduction (an item, or import, or even a built-in).
Except that local variables and generic parameters weren't represented as `NameBinding`s, for this reason they requires separate paths in name resolution code in several places.
This PR introduces `NameBinding`s for local variables as well and simplifies all the code working with them leaving only the `NameBinding` paths.
Add support for artifact size profiling
This adds support for profiling artifact file sizes (incremental compilation artifacts and query cache to begin with).
Eventually we want to track this in perf.rlo so we can ensure that file sizes do not change dramatically on each pull request.
This relies on support in measureme: https://github.com/rust-lang/measureme/pull/169. Once that lands we can update this PR to not point to a git dependency.
This was worked on together with `@michaelwoerister.`
r? `@wesleywiser`
Adopt let_else across the compiler
This performs a substitution of code following the pattern:
```
let <id> = if let <pat> = ... { identity } else { ... : ! };
```
To simplify it to:
```
let <pat> = ... { identity } else { ... : ! };
```
By adopting the `let_else` feature (cc #87335).
The PR also updates the syn crate because the currently used version of the crate doesn't support `let_else` syntax yet.
Note: Generally I'm the person who *removes* usages of unstable features from the compiler, not adds more usages of them, but in this instance I think it hopefully helps the feature get stabilized sooner and in a better state. I have written a [comment](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/87335#issuecomment-944846205) on the tracking issue about my experience and what I feel could be improved before stabilization of `let_else`.
Fix wrong niche calculation when 2+ niches are placed at the start
When the niche is at the start, existing code incorrectly uses 1 instead of count for subtraction.
Fix#90038
`@rustbot` label: T-compiler
Rollup of 8 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #89766 (RustWrapper: adapt for an LLVM API change)
- #89867 (Fix macro_rules! duplication when reexported in the same module)
- #89941 (removing TLS support in x86_64-unknown-none-hermitkernel)
- #89956 (Suggest a case insensitive match name regardless of levenshtein distance)
- #89988 (Do not promote values with const drop that need to be dropped)
- #89997 (Add test for issue #84957 - `str.as_bytes()` in a `const` expression)
- #90002 (⬆️ rust-analyzer)
- #90034 (Tiny tweak to Iterator::unzip() doc comment example.)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Do not promote values with const drop that need to be dropped
Changes from #88558 allowed using `~const Drop` in constants by
introducing a new `NeedsNonConstDrop` qualif.
The new qualif was also used for promotion purposes, and allowed
promotion to happen for values that needs to be dropped but which
do have a const drop impl.
Since for promoted the drop implementation is never executed,
this lead to observable change in behaviour. For example:
```rust
struct Panic();
impl const Drop for Panic {
fn drop(&mut self) {
panic!();
}
}
fn main() {
let _ = &Panic();
}
```
Restore the use of `NeedsDrop` qualif during promotion to avoid the issue.
Suggest a case insensitive match name regardless of levenshtein distance
Fixes#86170
Currently, `find_best_match_for_name` only returns a case insensitive match name depending on a Levenshtein distance. It's a bit unfortunate that that hides some suggestions for typos like `Bar` -> `BAR`. That idea is from https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/46347#discussion_r153701834, but I think it still makes some sense to show a candidate when we find a case insensitive match name as it's more like a typo.
Skipped the `candidate != lookup` check because the current (i.e, `levenshtein_match`) returns the exact same `Symbol` anyway but it doesn't seem to confuse anything on UI tests.
r? ``@estebank``
removing TLS support in x86_64-unknown-none-hermitkernel
HermitCore's kernel itself doesn't support TLS. Consequently, the entries in x86_64-unknown-none-hermitkernel should be removed. This commit should help to finalize #89062.
RustWrapper: adapt for an LLVM API change
No functional changes intended.
The LLVM commit
89b57061f7
moved TargetRegistry.(h|cpp) from Support to MC.
This adapts RustWrapper accordingly.
Revert "Auto merge of #89709 - clemenswasser:apply_clippy_suggestions…
…_2, r=petrochenkov"
The PR had some unforseen perf regressions that are not as easy to find.
Revert the PR for now.
This reverts commit 6ae8912a3e, reversing
changes made to 86d6d2b738.
The const qualification was so far performed before the promotion and
the implementation assumed that it will never encounter a promoted.
With `const_precise_live_drops` feature, checking for live drops is
delayed until after drop elaboration, which in turn runs after
promotion. so the assumption is no longer true. When evaluating
`NeedsNonConstDrop` it is now possible to encounter promoteds.
Use type base qualification for the promoted. It is a sound
approximation in general, and in the specific case of promoteds and
`NeedsNonConstDrop` it is precise.
Remove redundant member-constraint check
impl trait will, for each lifetime in the hidden type, register a "member constraint" that says the lifetime must be equal or outlive one of the lifetimes of the impl trait. These member constraints will be solved by borrowck
But, as you can see in the big red block of removed code, there was an ad-hoc check for member constraints happening at the site where they get registered. This check had some minor effects on diagnostics, but will fall down on its feet with my big type alias impl trait refactor. So we removed it and I pulled the removal out into a (hopefully) reviewable PR that works on master directly.
Changes from #88558 allowed using `~const Drop` in constants by
introducing a new `NeedsNonConstDrop` qualif.
The new qualif was also used for promotion purposes, and allowed
promotion to happen for values that needs to be dropped but which
do have a const drop impl.
Since for promoted the drop implementation is never executed,
this lead to observable change in behaviour. For example:
```rust
struct Panic();
impl const Drop for Panic {
fn drop(&mut self) {
panic!();
}
}
fn main() {
let _ = &Panic();
}
```
Restore the use of `NeedsDrop` qualif during promotion to avoid the issue.
Index and hash HIR as part of lowering
Part of https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/88186
~Based on https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/88880 (see merge commit).~
Once HIR is lowered, it is later indexed by the `index_hir` query and hashed for `crate_hash`. This PR moves those post-processing steps to lowering itself. As a side objective, the HIR crate data structure is refactored as an `IndexVec<LocalDefId, Option<OwnerInfo<'hir>>>` where `OwnerInfo` stores all the relevant information for an HIR owner.
r? `@michaelwoerister`
cc `@petrochenkov`
The affected crates have had plenty of time to update.
By keeping these as lints rather than making them hard errors,
we ensure that downstream crates will still be able to compile,
even if they transitive depend on broken versions of the affected
crates.
This should hopefully discourage anyone from writing any
new code which relies on the backwards-compatibility behavior.
rustc_span: `Ident::invalid` -> `Ident::empty`
The equivalent for `Symbol`s was renamed some time ago (`kw::Invalid` -> `kw::Empty`), and it makes sense to do the same thing for `Ident`s as well.
Nicer error message if the user attempts to do let...else if
Gives a nice "conditional `else if` is not supported for `let...else`" error when encountering a `let...else if` pattern, as suggested in the [let...else tracking issue](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/87335#issuecomment-944846205).
Some "parenthesis" and "parentheses" fixes
"Parenthesis" is the singular (e.g. one `(` or one `)`) and "parentheses" is the plural (multiple `(` or `)`s) and this is not hard to mix up so here are some fixes for that.
Inspired by #89958
ty::pretty: prevent infinite recursion for `extern crate` paths.
Fixes#55779, fixes#87932.
This fix is based on `@estebank's` idea in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/55779#issuecomment-614758510 - but instead of trying to get `try_print_visible_def_path_recur`'s cycle detection to work in this case, this PR "just" disables the "visible path" feature when printing the path to an `extern crate`, so that the old recursion chain of `try_print_visible_def_path -> print_def_path -> try_print_visible_def_path`, is now impossible.
Both tests have been confirmed to crash `rustc` because of a stack overflow, without the fix.
polymorphization: shims and predicates
Supersedes #75737 and #75414. This pull request includes up some changes to polymorphization which hadn't landed previously and gets stage2 bootstrapping and the test suite passing when polymorphization is enabled. There are still issues with `type_id` and polymorphization to investigate but this should get polymorphization in a reasonable state to work on.
- #75737 and #75414 both worked but were blocked on having the rest of the test suite pass (with polymorphization enabled) with and without the PRs. It makes more sense to just land these so that the changes are in.
- #75737's changes remove the restriction of `InstanceDef::Item` on polymorphization, so that shims can now be polymorphized. This won't have much of an effect until polymorphization's analysis is more advanced, but it doesn't hurt.
- #75414's changes remove all logic which marks parameters as used based on their presence in predicates - given #75675, this will enable more polymorphization and avoid the symbol clashes that predicate logic previously sidestepped.
- Polymorphization now explicitly checks (and skips) foreign items, this is necessary for stage2 bootstrapping to work when polymorphization is enabled.
- The conditional determining the emission of a note adding context to a post-monomorphization error has been modified. Polymorphization results in `optimized_mir` running for shims during collection where that wouldn't happen previously, some errors are emitted during `optimized_mir` and these were considered post-monomorphization errors with the existing logic (more errors and shims have a `DefId` coming from the std crate, not the local crate), adding a note that resulted in tests failing. It isn't particularly feasible to change where polymorphization runs or prevent it from using `optimized_mir`, so it seemed more reasonable to not change the conditional.
- `characteristic_def_id_of_type` was being invoked during partitioning for self types of impl blocks which had projections that depended on the value of unused generic parameters of a function - this caused a ICE in a debuginfo test. If partitioning is enabled and the instance needs substitution then this is skipped. That test still fails for me locally, but not with an ICE, but it fails in a fresh checkout too, so 🤷♂️.
r? `@lcnr`
Remove trailing semicolon from macro call span
Macro call site spans are now less surprising/more consistent since they no longer contain a semicolon after the macro call.
The downside is that we need to do a little guesswork to get the semicolon in diagnostics. But this should not be noticeable since it is rare for the semicolon to not immediately follow the macro call.
HermitCore's kernel itself doesn't support TLS.
Consequently, the entries in x86_64-unknown-none-hermitkernel should be removed.
This commit should help to finalize #89062.
emitter: current substitution can be multi-line
Fixes#89280.
In `splice_lines`, there is some arithmetic to compute the required alignment such that future substitutions in a suggestion are aligned correctly. However, this assumed that the current substitution's span was only on a single line. In circumstances where this was not true, it could result in a arithmetic overflow when the substitution's end column was less than the substitution's start column.
r? ````@oli-obk````
The syn crate has gained support for let_else syntax in version 1.0.76,
see https://github.com/dtolnay/syn/pull/1057 .
In the three instances that use let_else, we've sent code through an
attr macro, which would create compile errors when there was no
let_else support in syn. To avoid this, we ran
`cargo +nightly update -p syn` for updating the syn crate.
This performs a substitution of code following the pattern:
let <id> = if let <pat> = ... { identity } else { ... : ! };
To simplify it to:
let <pat> = ... { identity } else { ... : ! };
By adopting the let_else feature.
In `splice_lines`, there is some arithmetic to compute the required
alignment such that future substitutions in a suggestion are aligned
correctly. However, this assumed that the current substitution's span
was only on a single line. In circumstances where this was not true, it
could result in a arithmetic overflow when the substitution's end
column was less than the substitution's start column.
Signed-off-by: David Wood <david.wood@huawei.com>
The PR had some unforseen perf regressions that are not as easy to find.
Revert the PR for now.
This reverts commit 6ae8912a3e, reversing
changes made to 86d6d2b738.
Rollup of 7 pull requests
Successful merges:
- #86011 (move implicit `Sized` predicate to end of list)
- #89821 (Add a strange test for `unsafe_code` lint.)
- #89859 (add dedicated error variant for writing the discriminant of an uninhabited enum variant)
- #89870 (Suggest Box::pin when Pin::new is used instead)
- #89880 (Use non-checking TLS relocation in aarch64 asm! sym test.)
- #89885 (add long explanation for E0183)
- #89894 (Remove unused dependencies from rustc_const_eval)
Failed merges:
r? `@ghost`
`@rustbot` modify labels: rollup
Suggest Box::pin when Pin::new is used instead
This fixes an incorrect diagnostic.
**Based on #89390**; only the last commit is specific to this PR. "Ignore whitespace changes" also helps here.
add dedicated error variant for writing the discriminant of an uninhabited enum variant
This is conceptually different from hitting an `Unreachable` terminator. Also add some sanity check making sure we don't write discriminants of things that do not have discriminants.
r? ``@oli-obk``
move implicit `Sized` predicate to end of list
In `Bounds::predicates()`, move the implicit `Sized` predicate to the
end of the generated list. This means that if there is an explicit
`Sized` bound, it will be checked first, and any resulting
diagnostics will have a more useful span.
Fixes#85998, at least partially. ~~Based on #85979, but only the last 2 commits are new for this pull request.~~ (edit: rebased) A full fix would need to deal with where-clauses, and that seems difficult. Basically, predicates are being collected in multiple stages, and there are two places where implicit `Sized` predicates can be inserted: once for generic parameters, and once for where-clauses. I think this insertion is happening too early, and we should actually do it only at points where we collect all of the relevant trait bounds for a type parameter.
I could use some help interpreting the changes to the stderr output. It looks like reordering the predicates changed some diagnostics that don't obviously have anything to do with `Sized` bounds. Possibly some error reporting code is making assumptions about ordering of predicates? The diagnostics for src/test/ui/derives/derives-span-Hash-*.rs seem to have improved, no longer pointing at the type parameter identifier, but src/test/ui/type-alias-impl-trait/generic_duplicate_param_use9.rs became less verbose for some reason.
I also ran into an instance of #84970 while working on this, but I kind of expected that could happen, because I'm reordering predicates. I can open a separate issue on that if it would be helpful.
``@estebank`` this seems likely to conflict (slightly?) with your work on #85947; how would you like to resolve that?
Fix incorrect Box::pin suggestion
The suggestion checked if `Pin<Box<T>>` could be coeerced to the expected
type, but did not check predicates created by the coercion. We now
look for predicates that definitely cannot be satisfied before giving
the suggestion.
The suggestion is still marked MaybeIncorrect because we allow predicates that
are still ambiguous and can't be proven.
Fixes#72117.
Add check that live_region is live in sanitize_promoted
This pull request fixes#88434 by adding a check in `sanitize_promoted` to ensure that only regions which are actually live are added to the `liveness_constraints` of the `BorrowCheckContext`.
To implement this change, I needed to add a method to `LivenessValues` which gets the elements contained by a region:
/// Returns an iterator of all the elements contained by the region `r`
crate fn get_elements(&self, row: N) -> impl Iterator<Item = Location> + '_
Then, inside `sanitize_promoted`, we check whether the iterator returned by this method is non-empty to ensure that the region is actually live at at least one location before adding that region to the `liveness_constraints` of the `BorrowCheckContext`.
This is my first pull request to the Rust repo, so any feedback on how I can improve this pull request or if there is a better way to fix this issue would be very appreciated.
Add `const_eval_select` intrinsic
Adds an intrinsic that calls a given function when evaluated at compiler time, but generates a call to another function when called at runtime.
See https://github.com/rust-lang/const-eval/issues/7 for previous discussion.
r? `@oli-obk.`
The suggestion checked if Pin<Box<T>> could be coeerced to the expected
type, but did not check predicates created by the coercion. We now
look for predicates that definitely cannot be satisfied before giving
the suggestion.
The suggestion is marked MaybeIncorrect because we allow predicates that
are still ambiguous and can't be proven.
suggestion for typoed crate or module
Previously, the compiler didn't suggest similarly named crates or modules. This pull request adds a suggestion for typoed crates or modules.
#76208
before:
```
error[E0433]: failed to resolve: use of undeclared type or module `chono`
--> src/main.rs:2:5
|
2 | use chono::prelude::*;
| ^^^^^ use of undeclared type or module `chono`
```
after:
```
error[E0433]: failed to resolve: use of undeclared type or module `chono`
--> src/main.rs:2:5
|
2 | use chono::prelude::*;
| ^^^^^
| |
| use of undeclared crate or module `chono`
| help: a similar crate or module exists: `chrono`
```
Remove textual span from diagnostic string
This is an unnecessary repetition, as the diagnostic prints the span anyway in the source path right below the message.
I further removed the identification of the node, as that does not give any new information in any of the cases that are changed in tests.
EDIT: also inserted a suggestion that other diagnostics were already emitting
Specify the `cpu` and the `max_atomic_width` (64).
Set `stack_probes` similarly to other targets to work around known
issues, and copy the corresponding comment from those targets.
Build position-independent code that doesn't require relocations.
(Work on this target sponsored by Profian.)
Most Rust freestanding/bare-metal targets use just `-unknown-none` here,
including aarch64-unknown-none, mipsel-unknown-none, and the BPF
targets. The *only* target using `-unknown-none-elf` is RISC-V.
The underlying toolchain doesn't care; LLVM accepts both `x86_64-unknown-none`
and `x86_64-unknown-none-elf`.
In addition, there's a long history of embedded x86 targets with varying
definitions for the `elf` suffix; on some of those embedded targets,
`elf` implied the inclusion of a C library based on newlib or similar.
Using `x86_64-unknown-none` avoids any potential ambiguity there.
(Work on this target sponsored by Profian.)
Include rmeta candidates in "multiple matching crates" error
Only dylib and rlib candidates were included in the error. I think the
reason is that at the time this error was originally implemented, rmeta
crate sources were represented different from dylib and rlib sources.
I wrote up more detailed analysis in [this comment][1].
The new version of the code is also a bit easier to read and should be
more robust to future changes since it uses `CrateSources::paths()`.
I also changed the code to sort the candidates to make the output deterministic;
added full stderr tests for the error; and added a long error code explanation.
[1]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/88675#issuecomment-935282436
cc `@Mark-Simulacrum` `@jyn514`
avoid suggesting the same name
sort candidates
fix a message
use `opt_def_id` instead of `def_id`
move `find_similarly_named_module_or_crate` to rustc_resolve/src/diagnostics.rs
Fix: non_exhaustive_omitted_patterns by filtering unstable and doc hidden variants
Fixes: #89042
Now that #86809 has been merged there are cases (std::io::ErrorKind) where unstable feature gated variants were included in warning/error messages when the feature was not turned on. This filters those variants out of the return of `SplitWildcard::new`.
Variants marked `doc(hidden)` are filtered out of the witnesses list in `Usefulness::apply_constructor`.
Probably worth a perf run 🤷 since this area can be sensitive.
The test is copied from `src/test/ui/crate-loading/crateresolve1.rs` and
its auxiliary tests. I added it to the `compile_fail` code example check
exemption list since it's hard if not impossible to reproduce this error
in a standalone code example.
Only dylib and rlib candidates were included in the error. I think the
reason is that at the time this error was originally implemented, rmeta
crate sources were represented different from dylib and rlib sources.
I wrote up more detailed analysis in [this comment][1].
The new version of the code is also a bit easier to read and should be
more robust to future changes since it uses `CrateSources::paths()`.
[1]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/88675#issuecomment-935282436
Remove built-in query cache_hit tracking
This was already only enabled in debug_assertions builds. Generally, it seems
like most use cases that would use this could also use the -Zself-profile flag
which also tracks cache hits (in all builds), and so the extra cfg's and such
are not really necessary.
This is largely just a small cleanup though, which primarily is intended to make
other changes easier by avoiding the need to deal with this field.
Add test cases for unstable variants
Add test cases for doc hidden variants
Move is_doc_hidden to method on TyCtxt
Add unstable variants test to reachable-patterns ui test
Rename reachable-patterns -> omitted-patterns
The support for runtime multi-threading was removed from LLVM. Calls to
`LLVMStartMultithreaded` became no-ops equivalent to checking if LLVM
was compiled with support for threads http://reviews.llvm.org/D4216.
Fix ICE when compiling nightly std/rustc on beta compiler
Fix#89775#89479 renames a lot of diagnostic items, but it happens that the beta compiler assumes that there must be DefId with `rustc_diagnostic_item = "send_trait"`, causing an ICE when compiling stage 0 std or stage 1 compiler. So gate it with `cfg(bootstrap)`.
The unwrap is also removed, so that existence of the diagnostic item is not required. I ripgreped the code base and this seems the only place where `unwrap` is called on the return value of `get_diagnostic_item`.
Re-use TypeChecker instead of passing around some of its fields
In the future (for lazy TAIT) we will need more of its fields, but even ignoring that, this change seems reasonable on its own to me.
Fix inherent impl overlap check.
The current implementation of the overlap check was slightly buggy, and unified the wrong connected component in the `ids.len() <= 1` case. This became visible in another PR which changed the iteration order of items.
r? ``@matthewjasper`` since you reviewed the other PR.
Ignore type of projections for upvar capturing
Fix#89606
Ignore type of projections for upvar capturing. Originally HashMap is used, and the hash/eq implementation of Place takes the type of projections into account. These types may differ by lifetime which causes #89606 to ICE.
I originally considered erasing regions but `place.ty()` is used when creating upvar tuple type, more than just serving as a key type, so I switched to a linear comparison with custom eq (`compare_place_ignore_ty`) instead.
r? `@wesleywiser`
`@rustbot` label +T-compiler
This was already only enabled in debug_assertions builds. Generally, it seems
like most use cases that would use this could also use the -Zself-profile flag
which also tracks cache hits (in all builds), and so the extra cfg's and such
are not really necessary.
This is largely just a small cleanup though, which primarily is intended to make
other changes easier by avoiding the need to deal with this field.
This change adds a new compiler flag that can help reduce the size of
ELF binaries that contain many functions.
By default, when enabling function sections (which is the default for most
targets), the LLVM backend will generate different section names for each
function. For example, a function "func" would generate a section called
".text.func". Normally this is fine because the linker will merge all those
sections into a single one in the binary. However, starting with LLVM 12
(llvm/llvm-project@ee5d1a0), the backend will
also generate unique section names for exception handling, resulting in
thousands of ".gcc_except_table.*" sections ending up in the final binary
because some linkers don't currently merge or strip these EH sections.
This can bloat the ELF headers and string table significantly in
binaries that contain many functions.
The new option is analogous to Clang's -fno-unique-section-names, and
instructs LLVM to generate the same ".text" and ".gcc_except_table"
section for each function, resulting in smaller object files and
potentially a smaller final binary.
Add enum_intrinsics_non_enums lint
There is a clippy lint to prevent calling [`mem::discriminant`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/mem/fn.discriminant.html) with a non-enum type. I think the lint is worthy of being included in rustc, given that `discriminant::<T>()` where `T` is a non-enum has an unspecified return value, and there are no valid use cases where you'd actually want this.
I've also made the lint check [variant_count](https://doc.rust-lang.org/core/mem/fn.variant_count.html) (#73662).
closes#83899
Fix RUSTC_LOG handling
Rustc was incorrectly reading the value of `RUSTC_LOG` as the environment vairable with the logging configuration, rather than the logging configuration itself.
Create more accurate debuginfo for vtables.
Before this PR all vtables would have the same name (`"vtable"`) in debuginfo. Now they get an unambiguous name that identifies the implementing type and the trait that is being implemented.
This is only one of several possible improvements:
- This PR describes vtables as arrays of `*const u8` pointers. It would nice to describe them as structs where function pointer is represented by a field with a name indicative of the method it maps to. However, this requires coming up with a naming scheme that avoids clashes between methods with the same name (which is possible if the vtable contains multiple traits).
- The PR does not update the debuginfo we generate for the vtable-pointer field in a fat `dyn` pointer. Right now there does not seem to be an easy way of getting ahold of a vtable-layout without also knowing the concrete self-type of a trait object.
r? `@wesleywiser`
Rustc was incorrectly reading the value of `RUSTC_LOG` as the
environment vairable with the logging configuration, rather than the
logging configuration itself.
Show detailed expected/found types in error message when trait paths are the same
Fixes#65230.
### Issue solved by this PR
```rust
trait T {
type U;
fn f(&self) -> Self::U;
}
struct X<'a>(&'a mut i32);
impl<'a> T for X<'a> {
type U = &'a i32;
fn f(&self) -> Self::U {
self.0
}
}
fn main() {}
```
Compiler generates the following note:
```
note: ...so that the types are compatible
--> test.rs:10:28
|
10 | fn f(&self) -> Self::U {
| ____________________________^
11 | | self.0
12 | | }
| |_____^
= note: expected `T`
found `T`
```
This note is not useful since the expected type and the found type are the same.
### How this PR solve the issue
When the expected type and the found type are exactly the same in string representation, the note falls back to the detailed string representation of trait ref:
```
note: ...so that the types are compatible
--> test.rs:10:28
|
10 | fn f(&self) -> Self::U {
| ____________________________^
11 | | self.0
12 | | }
| |_____^
= note: expected `<X<'a> as T>`
found `<X<'_> as T>`
```
So that a user can notice what was different between the expected one and the found one.
Add new tier-3 target: armv7-unknown-linux-uclibceabihf
This change adds a new tier-3 target: armv7-unknown-linux-uclibceabihf
This target is primarily used in embedded linux devices where system resources are slim and glibc is deemed too heavyweight. Cross compilation C toolchains are available [here](https://toolchains.bootlin.com/) or via [buildroot](https://buildroot.org).
The change is based largely on a previous PR #79380 with a few minor modifications. The author of that PR was unable to push the PR forward, and graciously allowed me to take it over.
Per the [target tier 3 policy](https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/blob/master/text/2803-target-tier-policy.md), I volunteer to be the "target maintainer".
This is my first PR to Rust itself, so I apologize if I've missed things!
Refactor fingerprint reconstruction
This PR replaces can_reconstruct_query_key with fingerprint_style, which returns the style of the fingerprint for that query. This allows us to avoid trying to extract a DefId (or equivalent) from keys which *are* reconstructible because they're () but not as DefIds.
This is done with the goal of fixing -Zdump-dep-graph, which seems to have broken a while ago (I didn't try to bisect). Currently even on a `fn main() {}` file it'll ICE (you need to also pass -Zquery-dep-graph for it to work at all), and this patch indirectly fixes the cause of that ICE. This also adds a test for it continuing to work.